Improving privacy and security on the web [blog.chromium.org]
SameSite cookies explained [web.dev]
Google has promised to make it easier to protect your privacy [www.technologyreview.com]
Tech giant attempts a pivot at Google I/O event [www.usatoday.com]
Google finally revealed its plan to block cross-site tracking in Chrome [www.digitalinformationworld.com]
Google to limit cookies for ad tracking in Chrome browser [www.cnbc.com]
?Want to learn more about cookies, SameSite attribute and the changes in Chrome we announced at #io19 today? Visit the guide on https://t.co/biZidbwqCx!
— Chrome Developers (@ChromiumDev) May 7, 2019
?Link: https://t.co/EgfhHwmRU7
?Attention web dev friends:
— Mariko Kosaka (@kosamari) May 7, 2019
Chrome is making changes to cookies in order to improve privacy and security on the web.
Please read on the announcement and the guidance linked. This will very likely affect your site⛏https://t.co/3AVSTJqdbo
General info on SameSite cookies:
— Catalin Cimpanu (@campuscodi) May 7, 2019
RFC: https://t.co/q9ovzupTxi
Google blog post: https://t.co/rwtqwNqKNW
Extra info from the RFC creator: https://t.co/tUWqxI59gq pic.twitter.com/UpRgf0Ab4T
My main takeaways from the first Google IO sessions:
— Paul Kedrosky (@pkedrosky) May 7, 2019
- Google is tailwaggingly eager to convince people that it's obsessed with privacy & helpfulness
- We need machine learning to keep up with all the machine learning tools
- All conferences should be streamed with birds chirping
Announcing new efforts to increase transparency, choice and control around ads personalization – all part of our pledge to put users first while supporting an ads ecosystem that works for everyone. #io19 https://t.co/Nlwn2VPswD pic.twitter.com/42ekTTTev4
— Google Ads (@GoogleAds) May 7, 2019
In Opinion
— The New York Times (@nytimes) May 8, 2019
Sundar Pichai, the chief executive of Google, writes, "Privacy cannot be a luxury good offered only to people who can afford to buy premium products and services. Privacy must be equally available to everyone in the world."https://t.co/pvVmoT7yoT
Sure,sure. https://t.co/oK7b8x12qp
— Edward Tufte (@EdwardTufte) May 7, 2019
Google now says it opposes finger printing and work arounds of tracking prevention. But isn’t this what it was caught doing not so long ago against Safari users? And youtube private users? https://t.co/ZQQAWR7qTB pic.twitter.com/ZlrRY3VfXe
— Johnny Ryan (@johnnyryan) May 7, 2019
Today at IO we announced a big first step in my team's new project. Our goal is to evolve the way that ambient state works on the Web, such that all browsers are privacy preserving and provide major improvements to baseline security. https://t.co/iwCxbHajto
— Justin Schuh ? (@justinschuh) May 7, 2019
Google Prepares to Launch New Privacy Tools to Limit Cookies
— PETEY VID (@PeteyVid) May 8, 2019
Chrome users will get more information on what cookies are tracking them and how to block them#Google #privacy #cookies https://t.co/W0vc9AQPwi
Today we’ve announced changes we will be making in Chrome to improve privacy and security on the web.
— Chrome Developers (@ChromiumDev) May 7, 2019
?Link https://t.co/ak0Jhp6dqV
Here are my thoughts on yesterday's privacy announcement from the Chrome team (https://t.co/F0ZSzFU8MB). [Thread]
— John Wilander (@johnwilander) May 8, 2019
Read Google's post on the cookies changes here:https://t.co/EbYObByJtWhttps://t.co/nPXg1Pw7jZ
— Patience ? (@patiencehaggin) May 7, 2019
Or follow the #GoogleIO2019 Chrome keynote that just started:https://t.co/7idjNXa0R3
Google said this with a straight face, apparently https://t.co/5A5JOPUpCz pic.twitter.com/nNxtUixopB
— Johnny Ryan (@johnnyryan) May 7, 2019
? Bye bye, third-party #cookies! #io19 https://t.co/1imdfBG6Ao via @ChromiumDev
— Alba Roza (@Alba_Roza) May 8, 2019
?Want to learn more about cookies, SameSite attribute and the changes in Chrome we announced at #io19 today? Visit the guide on https://t.co/biZidbwqCx!
— Chrome Developers (@ChromiumDev) May 7, 2019
?Link: https://t.co/EgfhHwmRU7
Chromeでは今後、CookieでSameSiteがついていないものは、SmaeSite=Laxとして運用する、つまりCross siteではtop level navigationの時のみcookieがつき、mug, ajax通信ではcookieがつかない、これはまた広告、解析系のアプリ大変だな、、、 / “SameSite cookies explained…” https://t.co/kxFxPWHksk
— Yosuke FURUKAWA (@yosuke_furukawa) May 7, 2019
Chrome 76でSameSite=Laxがデフォルトになるんだ "SameSite cookies explained | https://t.co/MlOHSYI3vh" https://t.co/N4Usv35gqJ
— azu (@azu_re) May 7, 2019
“SameSite cookies explained | https://t.co/hqeBZYg4Io” https://t.co/xfsy0TXx1M
— suzuken (@suzu_v) May 8, 2019
Explainer up at https://t.co/rhZxiqO8uD, but the squinty summary of this is that it's as if they're sliding the IE6-era P3P privacy slider up to "High." pic.twitter.com/3A2LixAnes
— Eric Lawrence ? (@ericlaw) May 7, 2019
Google will definitely give you more options to keep apps from harvesting your location and limit how it stores your location history. And a future version of Chrome will do... something to make it easier for you to stop ad tracking, Google's included. https://t.co/3V4YTje2IN
— Rob Pegoraro (@robpegoraro) May 8, 2019
Some ad industry players are relieved Google's cookie changes announced yesterday weren't as dramatic as they could have been (at least in the near term). Some co's say they're still working to make their businesses less reliant on cookies: https://t.co/BXNO7UH8dl
— Meg Graham (@megancgraham) May 8, 2019